The Kaduna State
government has exposed how it buried 347 corpses in a mass grave last year
after the deadly clash between members of the Shiites sect and The Nigeria Army
in Zarıa.
This
was revealed by the Secretary to the Kaduna State Government, Mallam
Balarabe Lawal, while appearing before the Judicial Commission of Inquiry On Monday.
According
to Lawal, the corpses were given a mass burial in a grave on December 14, 2015
in a cemetery along Mando/ Zaria Road.
Lawal
added that a total of 191 unknown corpses were recovered from the Nigerian Army
Depot in Zaria, and another batch of 156 corpses recovered from the Ahmadu
Bello University Teaching Hospital (ABUTH) Shika.
Collaborating
the SSG’s narrative, the Director-General of Interfaith, Muhammad Namadi Musa,
who said he supervised the burial, stated that the corpses were buried
between 12 midnight and 5am.
Musa’s
narrative: “On December 13, 2015, I received a phone call from the SSG to come
to the Government House after which I was directed to go to Zaria to find out
the number of corpses and how they would be buried.
“I
moved in company of the state Commissioner of Police straight to ABUTH, Zaria
to ascertain the number of corpses. There we counted 156 corpses.
“At the Nigerian Army
Depot, the SSG directed me to meet with one Maj. Ogundare regarding the
corpses there. After introducing myself, he refused to let me know the number;
but later on, the SSG called me and told me the number.
“He also confirmed
the number while they were being buried; as he counted them one after the other
as they were laid in one grave.
“We
left the Nigerian Army Depot with three heavy-duty trucks and 60 young officers
who escorted us to assist in offloading the corpses. From ABUTH, Zaria, five
small trucks carried the 196 corpses. Most corpses were covered with black
materials and they included women and children”, he said.
Elder
brother of the leader of the Sh’ites sect, Mohammed Sani Yaqoob, stunned the
commission when he said he was happy with what the Army did to the sect
members, which he said was being funded by the Iranian government.
According
to Yaqoob, who is a step brother to El-Zakzaky, the soldiers would have been
regarded as cowards if they had turned their backs when they came
across members of the sect who blocked the convoy of the Chief of Army
Staff, Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai.
Speaking
in Hausa, Yaqoob said that as a child, El-Zakzaky, the fourth child in the
family of 16, was very sharp and intelligent.
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